Posted: 5:12 PM,
May. 29, 2006
By Frank Mungeam, KGW.com
VANCOUVER, Wash. - A minor earthquake occurred at 9:08
a.m. Monday, eight miles southwest of Mount St. Helens. The magnitude 3.1 event
was centered 2 miles underground.

USGS
A plume of
ash rises from Mount St. Helens on Memorial Day.
The quake was accompanied by a volcanic
ash plume that rose to 16,000-20,000 feet, according to airline pilots in the
area.
It was a very weak plume with little
ash, according to Carolyn Drieger with the USGS. Six minutes later, it was just
white steam.
USGS geologists say they saw ash over
crater floor, using remote cameras, and it appeared that some parts of the new
dome and fin have collapsed.

USGS
The fin in
the crater of Mount St. Helens, covered with ash from the Memorial Day event.
It was not initially clear whether the
quake caused the collapse or the collapse caused the quake.
Geologists at the U.S. Geological
Survey report a slight increase in the size and frequency of earthquakes at the
mountain over the past few weeks but say the increased activity is not out of
normal for the mountain's range of activity in the past year.
Dome building in the crater of Mount St. Helens has been taking
place since September of 2004 and a large fin has grown, then fractured, and
begun to grow again in the past month.